He served as Chief Scientist of the Scholarly Technology Group, and Adjunct Associate Professor of Computer Science, at Brown University.[2] While there he received NSF and NEH[3][4] grants and contributed heavily to the Open eBook and Encoded Archival Description standards. Previously, he was co-founder and Chief Scientist at Electronic Book Technologies, Inc., where he designed the first SGML browser (Dynatext), which earned 11 US Patents and won Seybold[5] and other awards.
His 1987 article with James Coombs and Allen Renear, "Markup Systems and the Future of Scholarly Text Processing", is a seminal source for the theory of markup systems, and has been widely cited and reprinted.
[6][7][8][9][10][11][12] The article "What is Text, Really?"[13] has also been widely cited and reprinted,[14] and led to several follow-on articles[15] In addition, he has published 2 books (Making Hypermedia Work: A User's Guide to HyTime and The SGML FAQ Book); as well as articles in a variety of journals, magazines, and proceedings.
He has given papers and tutorials at the ACM Hypertext Conference and various SGML and XML conferences,[16] a keynote address at the ACM Conference on Very Large DataBases (VLDB),[17] and a plenary talk at the Text Encoding Initiative 10 Conference.[18]
^"Archived copy"(PDF). Archived from the original(PDF) on 2011-07-22. Retrieved 2010-04-13.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)Angelo Di Iorio (March 2007), Pattern-based Segmentation of Digital Documents: Model and Implementation, vol. Technical Report UBLCS-2007-5, University of Bologna, Mura Anteo Zamboni 7 40127 Bologna (Italy): Department of Computer Science{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
^Steven J. DeRose; David G. Durand; Elli Mylonas & Allen H. Renear (1997), "What is text, really?", Journal of Computing in Higher Education, 1 (2): 3–26.
^Steven J. DeRose; David G. Durand; Elli Mylonas & Allen H. Renear (August 1997), "What is text, really?", SIGDOC, J. Comput. Doc., 21 (3): 1–24, doi:10.1145/264842.264843, S2CID12419068 (a special issue with multiple articles in response [2]).
^1999 Invited talks at VLDB. Malcolm P. Atkinson; Maria E. Orlowska; Patrick Valduriez; Stanley B. Zdonik; Michael L. Brodie., eds. (1999). Proceedings of the 25th International Conference on Very Large Data Bases. San Francisco, CA: Morgan Kaufmann.
^The Relation Between TEI and XML, later published as DeRose, Steven J. (1999). "XML and the TEI". Computers and the Humanities. Vol. 33, no. 1–2. pp. 11–30.
^Steven Abney. 1997. "Part-of-speech tagging and partial parsing." In
Corpus-Based Methods in Language and Speech."Archived copy"(PDF). Archived from the original(PDF) on 2003-12-09. Retrieved 2010-12-15.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link).
Susan Schreibman, Raymond George Siemens, and John M. Unsworth (eds). 2005. A companion to digital humanities. (Blackwell Companions to Literature and Culture). ISBN978-1-4051-0321-3. [3]